Ebba Busch criticizing EU commissioner on energy issues with power infrastructure visuals
Ebba Busch criticizing EU commissioner on energy issues with power infrastructure visuals
Billede genereret af AI

Ebba Busch kritiserer EU-kommissær for flaskehalsindtægter

Billede genereret af AI

Energiminister Ebba Busch (KD) retter et skarpt angreb mod EU's energikommissær Dan Jørgensen i striden om svenske flaskehalsindtægter. Hun har for nylig sat udvidelsen af et elkabel til Danmark på pause.

Ebba Busch ønsker fuld fleksibilitet for de tocifrede milliardbeløb, der er indsamlet via flaskehalsindtægter. Pengene bør ifølge ministeren kunne bruges til elstøtte og ny kernekraft.

I SVT's Agenda beskrev Busch udtalelser fra Dan Jørgensen som værende helt hårrejsende. Hun argumenterede for, at kommissæren er i modstrid med både kommissionen og virkeligheden.

Jørgensen har udtalt, at indtægterne kun må anvendes til at sikre netforbindelser og et rationelt energisystem. De kan ikke finansiere langsigtede produktionsanlæg som eksempelvis kernekraft.

Busch understregede, at Sverige bliver straffet af EU, selvom landet er et forbillede inden for energipolitik og en stor el-eksportør.

Hvad folk siger

Diskussioner på X viser stor opbakning til Ebba Buschs kritik af EU-kommissæren og hendes beslutning om at sætte elkablet til Danmark på pause, hvor mange brugere roser hende for at forsvare svenske flaskehalsindtægter mod EU-omfordeling. Nogle opslag udtrykker skepsis, stiller spørgsmålstegn ved konsekvenserne for den nationale energiforsyning og betegner retorikken som populisme. Reaktioner med høj engagement fremhæver nationale prioriteter frem for EU-samarbejde.

Relaterede artikler

Swedish PM Ulf Kristersson shakes hands at EU summit, securing bottleneck fees for national electricity grid expansion.
Billede genereret af AI

Kristersson secures Swedish bottleneck fees at EU summit

Rapporteret af AI Billede genereret af AI

Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson has received guarantees at the EU summit in Brussels that Swedish bottleneck fees will only fund expansion of the Swedish electricity grid. The funds will not be used for European projects. Meanwhile, the EU emissions trading system is defended against calls for changes.

The CEO of Företagarna, Magnus Demervall, criticizes Svenska kraftnät for holding 85 billion kronor in unused congestion revenues and compares the agency to Scrooge McDuck. He calls for more investments and lower grid fees to ease high electricity costs for households and businesses. Forecasts indicate February will be the most expensive month for electricity in modern times.

Rapporteret af AI

The Törnblom family outside Heby pays up to a thousand kronor in effect fees some months, a charge energy minister Ebba Busch (KD) demands be removed. Local utility Sala-Heby Energy has had a similar fee since 2004 and has no plans to change it. The company argues the fee helps customers keep costs low.

Electricity prices in Sweden will remain high for an extended period due to low reservoir levels and cold weather, according to analysts. In Bergs municipality in Jämtland, the local government is offering installment plans and investigating its own support to assist residents and associations. Criticism is directed at the national government for lacking state aid.

Rapporteret af AI

Christian Democrats leader Ebba Busch and rural affairs minister Peter Kullgren propose reviewing reindeer herding's status, reducing reindeer numbers, and no longer treating it as a national interest. The proposal, outlined in a SvD op-ed, faces sharp criticism from Sami representatives and the Green Party.

In the continuing German fuel price crisis driven by Middle East tensions, economist Veronika Grimm warns against discounts to sustain high prices and curb demand, citing severe supply bottlenecks in the Strait of Hormuz. She critiques broad relief amid limited fiscal space.

Rapporteret af AI

With the Austria-model daily price cap now in place, record diesel prices spark fresh calls for relief. Consumer Protection Minister Stefanie Hubig (SPD) supports Vice-Chancellor Lars Klingbeil's flexible cap idea, while Greens and economists push speed limits.

 

 

 

Dette websted bruger cookies

Vi bruger cookies til analyse for at forbedre vores side. Læs vores privatlivspolitik for mere information.
Afvis